PLoS ONE (Jan 2017)

Acute hypoxia diminishes the relationship between blood pressure and subarachnoid space width oscillations at the human cardiac frequency.

  • Magdalena Wszedybyl-Winklewska,
  • Jacek Wolf,
  • Ewa Swierblewska,
  • Katarzyna Kunicka,
  • Agnieszka Gruszecka,
  • Marcin Gruszecki,
  • Wieslawa Kucharska,
  • Pawel J Winklewski,
  • Joanna Zabulewicz,
  • Wojciech Guminski,
  • Michal Pietrewicz,
  • Andrzej F Frydrychowski,
  • Leszek Bieniaszewski,
  • Krzysztof Narkiewicz

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0172842
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 2
p. e0172842

Abstract

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BACKGROUND:Acute hypoxia exerts strong effects on the cardiovascular system. Heart-generated pulsatile cerebrospinal fluid motion is recognised as a key factor ensuring brain homeostasis. We aimed to assess changes in heart-generated coupling between blood pressure (BP) and subarachnoid space width (SAS) oscillations during hypoxic exposure. METHODS:Twenty participants were subjected to a controlled decrease in oxygen saturation (SaO2 = 80%) for five minutes. BP and heart rate (HR) were measured using continuous finger-pulse photoplethysmography, oxyhaemoglobin saturation with an ear-clip sensor, end-tidal CO2 with a gas analyser, and cerebral blood flow velocity (CBFV), pulsatility and resistive indices with Doppler ultrasound. Changes in SAS were recorded with a recently-developed method called near-infrared transillumination/backscattering sounding. Wavelet transform analysis was used to assess the relationship between BP and SAS oscillations. RESULTS:Gradual increases in systolic, diastolic BP and HR were observed immediately after the initiation of hypoxic challenge (at fifth minute +20.1%, +10.2%, +16.5% vs. baseline, respectively; all P<0.01), whereas SAS remained intact (P = NS). Concurrently, the CBFV was stable throughout the procedure, with the only increase observed in the last two minutes of deoxygenation (at the fifth minute +6.8% vs. baseline, P<0.05). The cardiac contribution to the relationship between BP and SAS oscillations diminished immediately after exposure to hypoxia (at the fifth minute, right hemisphere -27.7% and left hemisphere -26.3% vs. baseline; both P<0.05). Wavelet phase coherence did not change throughout the experiment (P = NS). CONCLUSIONS:Cerebral haemodynamics seem to be relatively stable during short exposure to normobaric hypoxia. Hypoxia attenuates heart-generated BP SAS coupling.